THE POWER movie poster | ©2021 Shudder

THE POWER movie poster | ©2021 Shudder

Rating: Not Rated
Stars: Rose Williams, Charlie Carrick, Gbemisola Ikumelo, Theo Barklem-Biggs, Nuala McGowan, Emma Rigby, Diveen Henry, Paul Antony-Barber, Shakira Rahman, Clara Read
Writer: Corinna Faith
Director: Corinna Faith
Distributor: Shudder
Release Date: April 8, 2021

THE POWER has a title with threefold meanings. It refers to the electricity, which is in short supply in 1974 London. It also encompasses the hierarchy of the hospital where the story takes place. Finally, it concerns the malevolent force that pervades the building when the lights are out.

The power shortage is due to a miners’ strike in Great Britain (this is historical fact). The government would rather suffer through nightly blackouts than negotiate.

This is bad news for young nurse Val (Rose Williams), who is afraid of the dark. On her first day on the job at a large hospital in London’s East End, she manages to annoy her immediate supervisor (Diveen Henry).

The result is that Val is ordered to work the night shift, when the staff is down to a skeleton crew. Most of the patients who can be moved and the attending medical personnel are transferred to a facility where there’s emergency power, but Val and the few other remaining nurses, plus maintenance man Neville (Theo Barklem-Biggs) and child runaway Saba (Shakira Rahman), have to make do with lanterns and flashlights.

There is also a presence – a power, if you will – in the hospital, which is agitated by Val’s presence, for reasons we gradually learn. It has terrifying and sometimes lethal ways of expressing itself.

Writer/director Corinna Faith manages to be very scary on a number of fronts. She also finds ways of making her shots visually intriguing. Where light comes from and how much there is in any given shot creates a sense of scarcity and tension before anything even happens. It also feeds into the overall examination of power dynamics. Faith also uses composition to make points about personality. There’s a dialogue scene where two characters are talking, but one is reflected in a mirror and thus made smaller than the other.

There is also an eerie sense of dislocation, achieved not only by judicious use of darkness, but because Val, unfamiliar with her surroundings, seldom knows where she is.

Williams gives a soulful, warm performance as Val. Rahman is sympathetic as the frightened youg Saba. Henry is properly intimidating, with layers, as the formidable matron in charge. Gbemisola Ikumelo, Nuala McGowan, and Emma Rigby all display lots of personality as Val’s fellow nurses. Charlie Carrick makes an impression as a doctor who takes a shine to Val, and Barklem-Biggs is suitably insinuating as the less than reassuring on-site handyman.

THE POWER has certain points it wants to make. As these become clearer, the film changes moods. It is to Faith’s credit that she pulls this off for the most part. The writing certainly lays the groundwork for it, though by the end, we have a few more questions than when we began.

Mostly, though, THE POWER is a strong horror movie, with a pleasing amount of bite.

Related: Movie Review:  VOICES
Related: Movie Review:  THE COURIER
Related: Movie Review:  GODZILLA VS. KONG
Related: Movie Review:  CRISIS
Related: Movie Review:  THE WINTER LAKE
Related: Movie Review:  RAYA AND THE LAST DRAGON
Related: Movie Review:  WRONG TURN 2021
Related: Movie Review:  THE SINNERS
Related: Movie Review:  THE MAURITANIAN
Related: Movie Review:  JUDAS AND THE BLACK MESSIAH
Related: Movie Review:  SOUL
Related: Movie Review:  THE RECKONING
Related: Movie Review:  THE CLEANSING HOUR
Related: Movie Review:  ONE NIGHT IN MIAMI
Related: Movie Review:  SHADOW IN THE CLOUD
Related: Movie Review:  WONDER WOMAN 1984

Related: Movie Review:  PROMISING YOUNG WOMAN
Related: Movie Review:  BLUMHOUSE’S THE CRAFT: LEGACY
Related: Movie Review:  ARCHENEMY
Related: Movie Review:  WANDER DARKLY
Related: Movie Review:  BLACK PUMPKIN
Related: Movie Review:  THE HONEYMOON PHASE
Related: Movie Review:  ANYTHING FOR JACKSON
Related: Movie Review:  BEAST MODE
Related: Movie Review:  ZAPPA
Related: Movie Review:  BOOKS OF BLOOD
Related: Movie Review:  THE GIANT
Related: Movie Review:  AMMONITE
Related: Movie Review:  JUNGLELAND
Related: Movie Review: A PLACE AMONG THE DEAD
Related: Movie Review: COME PLAY
Related: Movie Review: MORTAL
Related: Movie Review: THE CALL
Related: Movie Review: SYNCHRONIC
Related: Movie Review: TO YOUR LAST DEATH
Related: Movie Review: THE WITCHES
Related: Movie Review: LOVE AND MONSTERS
Related: Movie Review: DON’T LOOK BACK
Related: Movie Review: HOSTS
Related: Movie Review: ETERNAL BEAUTY
Related: Movie Review: DEATH OF ME
Related: Movie Review: POSSESSOR
Related: Movie Review: ANTEBELLUM
Related: Movie Review: SPIRAL
Related: Movie Review: RENT-A-PAL

Follow us on Twitter at ASSIGNMENT X
Like us on Facebook at ASSIGNMENT X

Article Source: Assignment X
Article: Movie Review:  THE POWER

 


Related Posts:

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Comment

CAPTCHA Image
*
Increase your website traffic with Attracta.com

Dr.5z5 Open Feed Directory

bottom round